Modena, Italy — On June 9, 1998, Luciano Pavarotti and Céline Dion delivered a rare cross-genre duet during the Pavarotti & Friends for the Children of Liberia benefit concert. The performance, staged in Pavarotti’s hometown of Modena, was part of a series of annual charity events raising funds for humanitarian causes.

The song, “I Hate You Then I Love You,” appeared on Dion’s 1997 album Let’s Talk About Love and is the English-language version of the Italian classic “Grande, grande, grande.” The live rendition paired Dion’s pop vocals with Pavarotti’s operatic tenor, creating a blend of styles rarely seen on the same stage.

The concert, broadcast internationally, was later released on the album Pavarotti & Friends for the Children of Liberia and on DVD. The performance received significant attention from both fans and critics. Admirers praised the chemistry between the two artists, describing the duet as a display of technical skill and emotional intensity. However, some critics were less favorable, with The New York Observer’s Jonathan Bernstein labeling it “a clattering camp travesty.”

The 1998 benefit event featured multiple high-profile collaborations and contributed proceeds to UNICEF programs aiding children affected by the Liberian civil war. The Pavarotti–Dion duet remains one of the concert’s most widely circulated clips, garnering millions of views in later years through television replays and online platforms.
Watch: Luciano Pavarotti & Céline Dion – “I Hate You Then I Love You” (1998)